184 resultados para III SECRETED PROTEINS
Resumo:
The Cr-III atom in CaK[Cr(C2O4)(3)].5H(2)O, has a regular octahedral geometry with three oxalato groups completing the coordination, Both the calcium and potassium cations are coordinated to the O atom of the oxalate group.
Resumo:
The hypothesis that growth hormone (GH) up-regulates the expression of enzymes, matrix proteins, and differentiation markers involved in mineralization of tooth and bone matrices was tested by the treatment of Lewis dwarf rats with GH over 5 days, The molar teeth and associated alveolar bone were processed for immunohistochemical demonstration of bone morphogenetic proteins 2 and 4 (BMP-2 and -4), bone morphogenetic protein type IA receptor (BMPR-IA), bone alkaline phosphatase (ALP), osteocalcin (OC), osteopontin (OPN), bone sialoprotein (BSP), and E11 protein (E11), The cementoblasts, osteoblasts, and periodontal ligament (PDL) cells responded to GH by expressing BMP-2 and -4, BMPR-IA, ALP, OC, and OPN and increasing the numbers of these cells. No changes were found in patterns of expression of the late differentiation markers BSP and E11 in response to GH, Thus, GH evokes expression of bone markers of early differentiation in cementoblasts, PDL cells, and osteoblasts of the periodontium. We propose that the induction of BMP-2 and -4 and their receptor by GH compliments the role of GH-induced insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) in promoting bone and tooth root formation.
Resumo:
Five strains of the filamentous bacterium 'Nostocoida limicola' III were successfully isolated into pure culture from samples of activated sludge biomass from five plants in Australia. 16S rRNA gene sequence analyses showed that all isolates were members of the Planctomycetales, most closely related to Isosphaera pallida, but they differed phenotypically from this species in that they did not glide and were not thermotolerant. The ultrastructure of these 'N. limicola' III isolates was also consistent with them being Planctomycetales, in that they possessed complex intracellular membrane systems compartmentalizing the cells. However, the arrangements of these intracellular membranes differed between isolates. These data confirm that 'N. limicola' III is phylogenetically unrelated to both 'N. limicola' I and 'N. limicola' II, activated sludge filamentous bacteria which share morphological features in common with 'N. limicola' III and which have been presumed historically to be the same or very similar bacteria.
Resumo:
Aims: Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and its associated proteins may be protective against the occurrence of apoptosis that would normally inhibit cancer development and progression. Alternatively, the viral infection may cause altered or mutated expression of oncogenes or tumour suppressor genes that are necessary for tumour development. an action that may also involve apoptosis, In this study, a relationship was sought between occurrence of EBV infection, expression of apoptosis-associated proteins (tumour suppressor gene p53 and oncogenes c-myc and bcl-2) and levels of cell death (apoptosis or necrosis) in 119 cases of gastric carcinoma. Methods and results: The EBV status of the gastric carcinomas (using the EBV-encoded small RNA I (EBER-1) and in-situ hybridization), stage and grade of tumour and sex of patients were compared for bcl-2, p53 and c-myc expression patterns. EBER-1 was detected in approximately 20% of cases studied. There was no significant correlation between levels of cell death in the tumour tissue and EBV status. In the protein analyses, development and progression of gastric carcinoma, with or without EBV infection. was independent of bcl-2 expression. However, in gastric cancers with EBV infection, p53 overexpression was inhibited and c-myc expression was increased in early stage cancers, in comparison with decreased c-myc expression in late stage cancers. Conclusions: The p53 and c-myc expression patterns indicate that EBV-infected gastric carcinomas are less likely to have a natural regression via apoptosis at an early stage and explain, in part, the resistance to treatment of late stage of gastric cancers.